The sixth All India Hindu Convention also asked for construction
of a grand Ram temple in Ayodhya and a ban on cattle slaughter and
religious conversions.

Declare India a Hindu rashtra, ban cattle slaughter and
declare the cow India’s national animal, ban all religious conversions,
start the construction of a grand Ram temple in Ayodhya: these were some
of the resolutions passed by the sixth All India Hindu Convention in
Goa on Saturday.
The four-day event, which began on Wednesday with
300 participants from 132 Hindu groups, was organised by the
Goa-headquartered Hindu Janjagruti Samiti and its sister organisation,
the Sanatan Sanstha, at the Ramnathi temple complex in the state’s Ponda
region. The Samiti’s national guide, Dr Charudatt Pingale, said the
next course of action was a national campaign against corruption and
injustice that would unite all Hindus.
“The government does not
listen to the people, nor does it work against corruption,” Pingale
alleged. As a result, he said, the convention has decided to intensify
its campaigns against corruption in the bureaucracy, malpractices in
the medical field, donations and capitation fees in education, and to
protect the nation and dharma.
There are also plans to get the
organisations’ activists to file more applications under the Right to
Information Act towards this end, and to organise right to information
camps for their activists and lawyers. Camps on providing first aid and
on self-defence were also proposed.
Furthermore, the Hindu
Janjagruti Samiti and Sanatan Saunstha will hold 45 district-level and
10 provincial Hindu conventions in the coming months.

Message to the BJP

Participating
in the convention, Bharatiya Janata Dal MLA from Telangana T Raja
Singh, who is the founder of the Shri Ram Yuva Sena, gave his party a
deadline of 2019 to start the construction of a Ram mandir in Ayodhya.
He threatened to quit the party and unite “one crore” Hindus if the
Central and state governments failed to start work on the temple by
then. However, he professed to have “great faith in Yogi Adityanath” –
the chief minister of Uttar Pradesh, who visited the makeshift Ram
temple in Ayodhya on May 31 and spoke of building the mandir by
consensus.
Singh also said the BJP should work out a national agenda to stop cow slaughter.
Another
participant, Bharat Raksha Manch national secretary Anil Dhir, said the
BJP had during the 2014 Lok Sabha election campaign promised to deport
“illegal Bangladesh settlers”. Three years hence, he said, “not even
hundred have been deported”. Claiming that these settlers have spread
across economic sectors and regions and now number four crore, Dhir said
the Centre ought to detect and deport them. “At least detect and delete
them from the electoral rolls” while giving them work permits, he
added.
Dhir claimed to have been part of the BJP’s campaign in
2014, and said many of its promises remain unfulfilled, such as on one
rank one pension for retired defence personnel and the declassification
of papers pertaining to Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose.The BJP was the object of Hindu Janjagruti Samiti national
spokesman Ramesh Shinde’s attention, too, as he said, “If you are in
power due to some promises, then you have to fulfil them. It is the duty
of Hindu organisations to show them the correct path.” He added,
“Criticism does not mean opposition.”
Bengaluru-based lawyer
Amrutesh NP, meanwhile, criticised the BJP government in Goa for banning
the entry of Sri Ram Sene convenor Pramod Muthalik, calling it a shame.
“We are pursuing the matter in the Supreme Court and I hope to attend
the next press conference with Pramod in Goa,” he said.
The state
had announced the ban in 2015 after Muthalik threatened to stop “pub
culture” in the tourist state, and it has been extending the ban ever
since.
The ruling BJP – which is making a conscientous effort to
take the middle ground in a state with a sizeable Christian population,
which it hopes to wean away from the Congress – has distanced itself
from the convention. The event did not see any participation from the
Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, the BJP’s ideological parent, either.

Controversial start

The convention got off to a controversial start
with Sadhvi Saraswati of Madhya Pradesh likening the consumption of
beef to “eating one’s mother” and saying all beef-eaters should be
hanged. She also called for Hindus to keep arms “for self-defence”. The
state Congress demanded that Goa Chief Minister Manohar Parrikar take action against her.
Asked
if the Hindu Janjagruti Samiti endorsed Saraswati’s view, Ramesh Shinde
said “it was her personal viewpoint”. However, the organisation’s
website put up excerpts of her speech and did not remove them even after
the controversy.
As the convention wound up on Saturday, a
two-day meeting of lawyers to chalk out a roadmap for a legal strategy
to “establish a Hindu Rashtra by 2023” got underway under the Hindu
Vidhidnya (Lawyer) Parishad. This lawyers’ group counts the bail
granted in April to Sadhvi Pragya Singh Thakur – accused of plotting
the 2008 blasts in Maharashtra’s Malegaon town that left six people dead
– as one of its victories. It has also represented Sanatan Sanstha
members accused in the 2009 blast outside a church in Madgaon in Goa.
After
the lawyers’ meeting, a special training session or adhiveshan for
activists will be held in the state’s Mahalaxmi temple from Monday till
Wednesday (June 19-21).

Map of L K Advani's Rath Yatra of 1990

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